Search for: "Small v. People" Results 4441 - 4460 of 8,533
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27 Mar 2015, 3:42 pm by Cynthia Marcotte Stamer
Stamer’s legal and management consulting work focuses on helping employers, insurers, employee benefit plans and their administrators, fiduciaries and advisors, community leaders and governments manage people, process and risk. [read post]
27 Mar 2015, 6:36 am by Simon Fodden
Great-nephew, some people would say. [read post]
26 Mar 2015, 8:20 pm by Donald Thompson
 Not every gunshot ineluctably results in serious physical injury (see, People v Gray, 30 AD3d 771 [3rd Dept 2006] [victim shot with shotgun from 20 feet away, evidence insufficient to establish serious physical injury]; see also, People v Rojas, 61 NY2d 726 [1984] [gunshot injury does not by itself establish substantial pain as required for physical injury]; People v Francis, 112 AD2d 167 [2nd Dept 1985] [same]; People v… [read post]
25 Mar 2015, 7:33 am by Dina Townsend
  The Court found cases of people being refused access to medication and medical attention. [read post]
24 Mar 2015, 2:52 pm
 It's a fairly small fee in the scheme of things -- probably offset by a day or two's worth of rental. [read post]
24 Mar 2015, 11:32 am by Venkat Balasubramani
We really ought to take a step back and question why we need to force people into these buckets (and examine the transaction costs required to create and enforce the taxonomization). [read post]
24 Mar 2015, 4:23 am by David DePaolo
”Last year the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board issued a significant panel decision, Patterson v. [read post]
19 Mar 2015, 6:00 am by Administrator
An infringement is defensible if the legislative objective is “pressing and substantial,” the chosen course is rationally connected to that objective, the injury to the right is small, and the infringement is proportionate to the benefit and effect of the impugned law. [read post]
13 Mar 2015, 6:09 pm by Patti Waller
An Introduction to ListeriaListeria (pronounced liss-STEER-ē-uh) is a gram-positive rod-shaped bacterium that can grow under either anaerobic (without oxygen) or aerobic (with oxygen) conditions. [4, 18] Of the six species of Listeria, only L. monocytogenes (pronounced maw-NO-site-aw-JUH-neez) causes disease in humans. [18] These bacteria multiply best at 86-98.6 degrees F (30-37 degrees C), but also multiply better than all other bacteria at refrigerator temperatures, something that allows… [read post]
11 Mar 2015, 4:00 am by John Gregory
The Conference set up a small working group that I chaired. [read post]